What RJM suggests is the only way of doing things at the moment, and it does work for the most part.
When you edit / create a view scheme in Std View, there is a lot of logic that can be applied to a view, which includes (as RJM suggests) overriding media types.
In my setup, under Audio, I have the following view schemes (amongst others)...
Audio
├ Classical
│ ├ Classical/Genre
│ └ Composer/Album
├ Disk Location
├ Music
│ ├ Artist/Album
│ └ Genre/Album
└ Style
├ All
├ Classical
└ Educational
Now, the trick for how *I* like things set up, is that..
-
Classical, while it appears in Theater View, does not show any music, rather the
Classical/Genre and
Composer/Album 'sub folders' are selected to show the music
-
Classical overrides the 'audio only' of the
Audio scheme, to show Videos as well as music files (so I can 'Listen' to an Opera video)
-
Music excludes any
Classical /
Audio Books or anything else that is not contemporary popular music (it actually includes only this, but that involves my tagging setup...)
-
Artist/Album and
Genre/Album are seen as sub-folders of
Music in Theater View, and similar to the
Classical setup,
Music shows only these subfolders (ie no music)
Just to give you an idea, my Classical view scheme has the following settings:
- Populate tree: Off
- Honor parent scheme seach strings: Off (enables me to include video)
- Show in Theater View: On
- Filter in Both Directions: Off
- Files to Show: [MyMediaType]=[Classical] ~sort=[Composer],[Filename],[MyMediaSubtype],[Other Genre]
Hope this helps.
FWIW: I agree with your suggestion. I'd like to be able to place a "Classical" option directly on to the root menu, and have the sub menu directly navigate the tree, with only files displayed in the 'content' area (i.e. no sub-view schemes in the content area). I personally don't really like having to select the "Views" option from the sub-menu to get a list of view schemes which have no heirarchical logic in their display in the dialog. This also fails the wife test.